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BE
THANKFUL YOU’RE NOT A TURKEY
This
coming Thursday is Thanksgiving.
Families all across this nation will be sitting down to enjoy
the abundance of food that the Lord has provided.
It is a day when we recognize the appreciation we feel for
everything we have been given.
We
will gather around our tables and be thankful for all we have.
But how can we truly be thankful if we have not submitted our
will to the Lord’s will? How
can we show gratitude if we are refusing to let Him into our lives?
I think we need to sacrifice something to God before we can
give Him our thanks. I
think we need to sacrifice our pride and our independence.
When
we give up that, we are humbling our hearts, and when we have a
humbled heart, God is then able to work His miracles in and around
us.
Have
you ever taken the time to ponder over what giving thanks really
means, or how we should do it?
1
THESSALONIANS 5:18, says,
“...
Give thanks in all circumstances.”
We
are told to be thankful in everything.
That doesn’t mean we are thankful for the bad things that
happen, but we are thankful because it is in those bad things we can
seek solace in the Lord. Be
thankful we serve a God who wants to have that kind of relationship
with us.
In
PSALM 35:28, it goes on to say,
“My
tongue will speak of your righteousness and of your praises all day
long.”
None
of us thanks in all circumstances for those things God has given us. And I would even go so far as to say that most of us do not
praise God all day long, either.
But we should for two reasons.
First of all, we should because God commanded it, and
secondly, we should because no matter how much or how little you
have, you have more than most of the people in the world.
Let’s talk about how …
1.
GOD GIVES -
BECAUSE HE LOVES US
How
thankful would you have been if you were among the first pilgrims?
There were three boatloads that came over from England to
make a home in this new country. On the voyage over, the wind blew them off course and instead
of landing in Virginia, they landed in Massachusetts. And they landed just before the onset of winter.
When
winter came, it came with a fury, and within a month, half of them
were sick. They had the
crudest of shelters and very little in the way of supplies.
Over half of them died that first winter, sometimes at the
rate of two and three a day!
Come
springtime, those that were left had next to no supplies left.
Thankfully, the Indians showed them how to plant and raise
corn. Their first
harvest was barely enough to keep everyone fed. The sponsors of their trip refused to send any more supplies
and I can imagine that, being human, many of them probably wanted to
go back to England.
I
guess it is human nature to choose to go back into bad situations
rather than go forth into unknown situations.
After all, the Israelites did the same thing.
Just a matter of weeks after being delivered out of bondage
and they were complaining and saying they should just go back to
Egypt.
What
did the pilgrims have to be thankful for?
They had their lives, and because the Indians showed them how
to plant and harvest corn, they had enough supplies to get through
the second winter. But
how was their Thanksgiving different than our day of Thanksgiving?
The
pilgrims prayed as if their lives depended on it, we don’t.
The pilgrims knew that every thing they had was a direct
blessing from our Lord; sometimes we forget that.
The pilgrims yearned to give thanks for all they had, and
most often we don’t.
I
want you to think of some of the blessings that God has given you in
your lifetime.
First
of all, God has given you the blessing of physical life.
He has also given a spiritual blessing, too.
He has given you the wisdom to seek Jesus in your life.
The
list in both these categories could go on and on, but I want to
concentrate on just one blessing for a moment; a blessing that
surpasses all the rest in importance to us.
God, in His great love for you, gave up His Son so that you
might choose to be reconciled back to God.
God
is a righteous and holy God. All
of us have been given the same chance to follow His rules, and to
gain entry into His house we must follow His rules.
So,
what else has God done for us?
For those of us who try to follow the rules, He let the blood
of Jesus pay our fines in full.
That is the one blessing that God has given us which is
greater than all other blessings combined.
So
God gives from the love in His heart, but how do we receive?
2.
WE RECEIVE SELFISHLY
The
grocer saw the mother and the little boy and knew they came in
together to buy groceries every week.
Wanting to keep his good customers happy, he went to them and
offered the boy an orange. The
boy looked at the man, and the mother said, “Now, Johnny, what do
you say to the man?”
Little
Johnny handed him the orange back and said, “Peel it first.”
Sometimes,
we get so focused on what we want, we don’t think about giving
thanks. And, sometimes,
we think so hard about what we want from God, we forget to ask God
what He wants from us.
In
areas of Mexico, there are hot springs and cold springs right beside
each other. The local
women often bring their laundry and wash them in the hot springs and
rinse them in the cold springs.
But instead of being thankful that God has given them this
natural and free Laundromat, they gripe because there is no soap!
How
many times have we been so focused on what we want that we didn’t
recognize the blessings God put in front of us?
In
1 SAMUEL, it talks about our pride and arrogance.
We view ourselves as the center of our lives, but that keeps
God from being the center of our lives.
We rely on ourselves, thinking we have what it takes to get
us through, but we should be relying on God because only He has what
it takes to get us through.
In
EXODUS 34:9, there is a description that fits most of us
today. That description
is not flattering, but it is true.
It is “stiff-necked.”
We are stiff-necked people, whether we are willing to admit
it or not. We are just
like the ancient Israelites.
Moses
is worshiping God, and he asks God to go with and forgive the
“stiff-necked” Israelites.
What was their problem?
They couldn’t seem to rely on God and focus on Him in their
lives. And God made a
promise to Moses saying that the Israelites would see wonders never
seen before in any nation. He
said if they would obey His commands, He would drive out their
enemies from in front of them.
And
God is telling us the same thing today.
If we will but turn from our wicked ways, and rely on Him, He
will do wonders for us as has never been seen before in the world.
But we need to receive His blessings in humility and love,
and not be so focused on what the world offers that we all but
forget about Jesus.
There
were four young men who went into a pizza place after work.
There was a sign that said the pizza would be ready in 20
minutes or it was free. One
of the men brought out a stopwatch and began counting as soon as the
waitress took their order. They
all watched with eager anticipation, and when it got down to a
minute left, they yelled at her to hurry, as time was running out.
When
it got down to the seconds, they all counted down in unison,
“3-2-1.” Barely ten
seconds late, they scolded her and demanded it was free.
Have
we ever treated God like some waitress at a pizza place? How many times do we tell God what we want and then start
counting down to see if we get it when we want it? Have you ever asked God for something and then got upset that
He didn’t answer the way you wanted Him to?
God will answer the prayers of His children, but maybe not in
the way, or the time, that we want Him to.
3.
LET’S GET IT RIGHT
Have
you ever noticed that we somehow manage to mess everything in our
lives up? It’s true.
We don’t even know how to pray right most of the time.
For
instance, a car dealer was facing bankruptcy.
Everything in his life seemed to be heading south.
He was walking on the beach one day trying to figure out what
to do when he stumbled on an old brass lamp.
When
he picked it up, a genie popped out and said he could have any wish
he could think of. He
thought for a moment and said he wished to be the only foreign car
dealer in a large city.
The
genie snapped his fingers and poof; the dealer was the only used
Cadillac dealer in downtown Tokyo.
I
wonder if he would have had better results if he had gone to God and
asked for whatever God wanted in his life.
That is how God wants us to pray, for things that will bring
glory to Him, not comfort to ourselves.
On
Thursday, kitchens in America will be used more than at any other
time of year. And as we
focus on kitchens, I want to share with you a list of signs that
have been spotted hanging in kitchens.
-
If
you don’t like my cooking, lower your standards
-
This
is a self-cleaning kitchen.
You use it; you clean it
-
We
offer 2 choices for dinner; take it or leave it
-
My
next house won’t have a kitchen – it will be next door to a
diner
Most
of us could find one or two of these signs to hang in our kitchens,
too.
If
you had been one of the first Pilgrims, would you have given thanks?
Consider
what they had been through, the men and women who broke bread
together on that first Thanksgiving in 1621.
They
had uprooted themselves and sailed for America, an endeavor so
hazardous that published guides advised travelers to the New World,
"First, make thy will.”
The
crossing was very rough and the Mayflower was blown off course.
Instead of reaching Virginia, where Englishmen had settled 13
years earlier, the Pilgrims ended up in the wilds of Massachusetts.
By the time they found a place to make their new home -
Plymouth, they called it - winter had set in.
The
storms were frightful. Shelter
was rudimentary. There
was little food. Within
weeks, nearly all the settlers were sick.
"That
which was most sad," Governor William Bradford later recalled,
"was that in two or three months’, half of their company
died, especially in January and February, being the depth of winter,
and wanting houses and other comforts; being infected with the
scurvy and other diseases.... There
died sometimes two or three of a day."
When
spring came, Indians showed them how to plant corn, but their first
crops were dismal. Supplies
ran out, but their sponsors in London refused to send more.
The first time the Pilgrims sent a shipment of goods to
England, it was stolen by pirates.
If
you had been there in 1621 - if you had seen half your friends die,
if you had suffered through famine, malnutrition, and sickness, if
you had endured a year of heartbreak and tragedy - would you have
felt grateful?
As
we give thanks for the abundance of food we have received, let us
also remember who we are and why we need our Lord.
ROMANS
3:11 tells us –
“There
is no one righteous – not even one.”
According
to that, every last one of us is a sinner.
Why are we sinners? We
are classified as sinners because we focus on ourselves instead of
focusing on God. And
that is rebelliousness.
The
Bible tells us that sinners will have a price to pay.
What is the price for our sin?
It is our very spiritual life.
ROMANS 6:23 begins by saying,
“For
the wages of sin is death.”
That
means that if we sin (and we all have) we deserve to die (which we
all do).
If
we die, that means our souls are going to be in hell forever.
No matter how bad you can think hell will be, it will be
millions of times worse than what you can imagine.
There are no words to accurately describe hell.
And those who think about it make a choice not to go to hell.
But the only way not to go to hell is by going to heaven
instead. But how do we
get to heaven?
The
last part of ROMANS 6:23 tells us.
It says, “The gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus,
our Lord.” What does
that last part mean? It
means that God has given us one way, and only one way, to escape the
torment of hell. That
One way is through Jesus as our Christ.
We
all have different reasons to be thankful, but more than any other
reason, I think all of us should give thanks for the things Jesus
did for us.
Thank
you, Jesus, for your act of self-sacrifice. You sacrificed your royal place in Heaven so that you might
come to us as man; and we worship You for that.
Thank
you, Jesus, for making yourself our servant for our sakes.
For showing us how to care for one another until You come
back.
Thank
you, Jesus, for giving your very life on Calvary, so that we might
live with You throughout all eternity.
As
we celebrate another Thanksgiving Day, let us look upon all the
blessings God has given us, and as we do, let us realize that it is
in the abundance of those blessings that we see the abundance of His
love.
INVITATION
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